Flipside #30

I’ve discussed it before in this forum (here, here and here), but I’ll repeat: I believe my memory to be correct in that no one looked to Flipside while it was around as a place for “rock criticism”, nor as a place to have one’s mind blown and taste defined by the immortal power of its prose. Nay, Flipside in the 1980s was more a clubhouse, bulletin board, connection point and gathering place for teenagers, night owls and newly-minted punk obsessives – a place to get the Southern California-centric ground-level view of it all, straight from Los Angeles & Orange Counties, where everyone’s favorite bands (Black Flag, Circle Jerks, Adolescents, Fear et al) were from. Consequently, it’s those early 80s issues that I still have and cherish, and/or have acquired after the fact.

In the 90s Flipside served a similar function, even once the bloom had almost completely worn off the SoCal musical rose. Today, as I’ve tried to make clear in previous Flipside unpackings, their issues remain one of the single best collections of archival material we have to make sense of it all, and I enjoy the fanzine far more now than I did then. Because I love LA punk rock of this era more than I do my family, my country and life itself, I still find myself quite enraptured with the slamtastic goings-on in this Flipside #30 from early 1982.

This magnanimity even extends to an early photo of Rodney Bigenheimer with Unit 3 and Venus and a Shane Williams with letter from prison. But I’m more entertained by this era’s letters from punks complaining about scene violence, poseurs, Serena Dank and “Parents of Punkers” and of course about the outstanding Phil Donahue episode with “mothers of punks”. A guy from Jodie Foster’s Army (from Phoenix) writes in complaining about how messed-up & angry the LA scene has become, and about a fight he nearly got into with some lunkhead when his band played the Cuckoo’s Nest. Editor Al Flipside responds, “We know things are a mess, our scene has been invaded by lots of assholes, most of them big”. Someone named “Kansas City” writes in complaining about San Francisco’s punks, but then blurts out this curveball kicker: “I liked the Sex Pistols and all that other shit too, but that was more than three years ago, anyway, what are the Sex Pistols compared to The Minutemen and The Meat Puppets? Or Tav Falco?”. Kansas City, contact Fanzine Hemorrhage with your real name and coordinates, please!

There are a ton of random-passing interviews; because Flipside staffers were at all the shows; they’d just corner a band before or afterward and let the tape roll. Sometimes it yielded some quotables; often it did not. The Adolescents are back after a short stint with Pat Smear on guitar (!); an item a page later says Smear is going to tour with Paul Roessler to back up Nina Hagen on a world tour (!!). Can confirm! There’s an interview with local band Godhead, who had a 45 on the Bemisbrain label (who gave us Hell Comes To Your House) that I thought I’d never heard, then I just listened to it here and yeah, I totally know this one – and without a doubt, I have not heard this song since the 1980s. 

Other early ‘82 groups interviewed included Fear; The Effigies from Chicago, RF7, Anti-Pasti and a brief Greg Hetson/Circle Jerks chat. New Order – yes, the very same – are being extremely difficult; Flipside #30’s interview with them is an interview of them saying they don’t want to be interviewed. They still snapped two smiling band member photos nonetheless (incidentally, I think New Order were fantastic around this era – listen). There’s also Modern Warfare, who get compared to The Germs and don’t mind in the least, and unfortunately TSOL and Crucifix interviews as well, both of which still remain unread 43 years later so that I can eventually apply those five minutes to charity work instead. 

And look who’s on the cover. Salvation Army, who would change their name next year to The Three O’Clock, talk about an upcoming New Alliance 45 called “Blow Your Mind” that never actually happened, as well as a full-length album that will be called Looking Through The Walking Four O’Clock. This also never happened. On one of my podcasts I back-announced some early Salvation Army material and authoritatively remarked they’d never put out an album, and that this material only ever came out later as Befour Three O’Clock – you know, the one with “She Turns To Flowers”. My pal Nick corrected my dumbassery – there was a Salvation Army album, and the two records were one and the same. Singer Michael Quercio was known as “Rickey Start” at this time, and in this interview. Some real mythmaking going on in early ‘82.

What else? Scene reports! From Seattle’s” “The group I like and think has a lot of talent is Solger” – oh hell yeah. The Phoenix report talks about how Madison Square Gardens is likely to close because of (imported?) punk violence. The scene reporter – Michael Cornelius – is crossing his fingers it won’t be more of the same at the upcoming Black Flag/Saccharine Trust/Minutemen/Plebs show. Plebs fans were totally nuts! There’s a photo of The Flesh EatersChris D. standing with two fellas from Social Distortion. There’s just been a Masque Revival Night in February 1982 at the Cathay de Grande with Controllers/Skulls/Bags/Plugz/Arthur J & The Goldcups, put together by Craig Lee, at which attendees were instructed to dress like it was 1977, a mere 5 years earlier. What would you dress like if instructed to dress like 2020? I shudder to think. At said event, The Bags only played “fast stuff” and were purportedly amazing. I would have gone if you’d have told me about it. 

Well, I just spent a ton of time flipping through my own copy of Flipside #30 taking notes in order to painstakingly capture the mood and the magic for you, only to just now find that you can experience it all yourself thanks to the Internet Archive. Enjoy!

4 thoughts on “Flipside #30

  1. Friend of mine had the Salvation Army album back then; he was sneaking back into the house through the window one night while tripping balls, and he had left it on the turntable playing on repeat. He said it sounded like it was speeding up and slowing down.

    “attendees were instructed to dress like it was 1977, a mere 5 years earlier. What would you dress like if instructed to dress like 2020? I shudder to think.” That is a head-spinner; kinda like how a lot of the songs on Nuggets or Bowie’s Pin-Ups were only 4-5 years old at the time

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  2. Effigies were/are great, got to see them a few times, Michael Cornelius just did a thing this past weekend with his early Phoenix band Jr. Chemists, and I still have the Salvation Army LP. Nice recap, thanks!

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